Sorcerors son
returns home
Entire
region turns to Christ
By
Diane Dadian Special to ChristianWeek
TORONTOA
struggling young congregation of Ethiopian immigrants in
Toronto, meeting in rented quarters and without a
fulltime pastor, has sent out its own missionary.
Binora Dado
returned to Geregema in southern Ethiopia in November
1994, supported by Bethlehem Evangelical Church in
Toronto. The son and heir of a highly feared local
sorcerer, Binora had survived previous attempts on his
life due to his conversion to Christ.
Since that
time some 3,000 converts have been reported and seven
churches have been planted.
The story
began more than 30 years ago when the first wife of a
much-feared sorcerer, a man with 13 other wives and
numerous concubines, became pregnant once more. Although
she had never before delivered a living child, she
believed this time might be different. She named her new
son "Binora," meaning "If he lives!"
She then died.
Light
years away
Despite the
very high rate of infant mortality locally, Binora
survived. In 1976 he traveled to the regional capital
Arba Minch to go to school. This move represented more
than distance measured in kilometres. It was light years
away for a boy whose father was considered almost a god,
second only to the sun god whose children, the stars,
rule the planets.
There in Arba
Minch, teenage Binora met an Ethiopian evangelist, Tadese
Aisa, who led him to faith in Jesus Christ. When the
Marxist government began to persecute Christians a few
years later, Binora fled to Sudan.
As a refugee,
Binora held on to his faith and eventually landed in
Canada, arriving in St. Johns, Newfoundland, later
moving to Toronto. He acquired all the right
thingscitizenship, a decent job, a car, an
apartment. He helped found Bethlehem Evangelical Church,
now sharing space in Calvary Church.
In 1992,
Binora returned for a visit to his home village and found
his people living exactly as he had left them. His
father, nearly 70, still maintained harsh control.
Escaping
attempts on his life by his enraged father, Binora
returned to Toronto. He could not forget what he had
seen. Soon he poured out his burden to the elders of
Bethlehem Church. How could he live in the comfort of
Canada when his own people were in such need? Ammanuel
Bahta, one of the elders, stated, "God gave him a
burning desire to preach which he could not ignore."
Urging
of God
The elders of
Bethlehem Evangelical Church met in prayer in 1994. As
Efrem Leakemariam, now the pastor, put it, "We felt
the urging of God to step out in faith. But how could we
do it? We had no money! We were such a young
congregation!" Prayerfully, they did it anyway.
In early
November 1994, Binora boarded a Lufthansa flight for
Addis Ababa. Days later he made his way south to
Geregema, accompanied by his evangelist-mentor, Tadese.
What followed
was dramatic. An unseen hand lifted Binoras father
into the air and then flung him into the trees. The
people who were watching accepted the gospel upon hearing
it. The sorcerer lost all control over the people.
"Wood
for the walls" of the new church building came from
"the very trees they had worshipped for years,"
Binora wrote. "Even the fortune-tellers and the
magicians are seemingly compelled to take an active part
in cutting the trees."
Since then a
road has been built into this remote area, medical and
educational work begun and a mill to grind grain
installed. Assistance has come from various levels of
government as well as the Kale Heywet Church of Ethiopia
and other agencies.
Two years
after Binoras return, in November 1996, his father
accepted Christ and was baptized a month later. Since
then the septuagenarian former sorcerer has been joyfully
preaching the gospel himself. Today the young church in
Geregema is a centre of missionary activity, sending
teams to outlying villages.
Many
financial needs, however, remain unmet, although
Bethlehem Evangelical Church continues its support.
"This is
like the days of Antioch and how missions began,"
says Ian Campbell, senior pastor of Calvary Church.
"Very few trappings... where the elders met and
prayed over every step. It has been a privilege to
watch!"
Diane Dadian is
a former missionary to Ethiopia who in recent years has
been very active helping newcomers settle in Canada. She
attends Calvary Church.
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